An alternative is to switch doctors to one that keeps to their and your schedule.
An alternative is to switch doctors to one that keeps to their and your schedule.
My suggestion is to hold off until you see what you need.
Binders? you know those things people put paper with notes into? Notebooks and other supplies too.
Get It Done is a great metro app that you can use for a Getting Things Done process. I used this app across all my computers and mobile devices for a while.
I'll chime in and suggest you look a the Surface RT. With student discount you're looking at $400 including the touch cover. So $200+ savings over an iPad.
thx for the suggestion. I've been trying to do something like this for a couple of months.
That's fine for word processing. What about spreadsheets?
You can run two instances of Excel if you want them on two different monitors.
It's amazing what a polite question will get you. I've had admin fees waived, additional bandwidth added etc. You just need to ask.
Agreed,
If possible show how your career change was a journey not a sudden shift. If in your old career you were more technical, did up macros, created some VBA enabled spreadsheets, some Access forms, etc. Essentially show them that in the first phase of your career you got involved in some lite programming then added to…
It still isn't clear how to merge accounts. I have one associated with a 25Gb Skydrive account that I'd like to merge with an outlook.com account. I don't want to lose the extra storage but it's a pain to have two different Skydrives concurrently.
I have to agree that leaving a hole in your resume by leaving off recent work is worse than showing recent retail experience.
I have a different folder for each month, that way I can archive things that are more than 18 months old. Just to clarify if you were think I just had one big ugly folder.
I can say that once you get past simple spreadsheets Docs is difficult. For a group project I was in I thought that Docs would be perfect. Instead of emailing different versions of the file or having one person compile all the changes Docs should have let me work in one 'file'. The problem was the feature set was…
I'm getting almost all of it out. I'm at six conversations currently and I'm extremely busy this week.
I use macros constantly. Everything from complex (for a non-programmer) to something as simple as merging cells, setting the text to wrap and changing the alignment in one step. That way I can have short paragraphs look good in my variance reports.
Compared to Lotus Notes it's a dream.
When I started using computers in school Office was the only 'integrated' application. Of course I was using WordPerfect / Quattro Pro / Harvard Graphics and it was awful.
For me I'll gladly pay for Office over other fee options.